The methodology behind every tool

Seven methods.
One system.

Groundwork doesn't invent new productivity frameworks. It builds the best physical tools for the ones that already work. This page explains each methodology, its core insight, and exactly which Groundwork tools implement it.

GTD
Method 01
Getting Things Done
David Allen · 2001
Capture
Clarify
Organise
Reflect
Engage
Pillar: Capture

Your brain is for having ideas, not storing them. Every open loop consumes mental resources whether you're thinking about it or not. GTD's five-step workflow is the structural backbone of the Capture pillar. The weekly review is its most underrated component — most planners skip it entirely.

Groundwork tools
Brain Dump PageWeekly ReviewDaily Focus Sheet
DW
Method 02
Deep Work
Cal Newport · 2016
Define
Protect
Execute
Debrief
Pillar: Constraints

The ability to perform cognitively demanding work without distraction is increasingly rare and valuable. Newport's framework: define the single deliverable, protect the time block, remove distractions in advance, debrief the session. The Ideal Week Architecture protects the block before it's displaced.

Groundwork tools
Deep Work PlannerIdeal Week ArchitectureDaily Focus Sheet
AH
Method 03
Atomic Habits
James Clear · 2018
Cue
Craving
Response
Reward
Identity First
Pillar: Compound

The most important insight isn't about habits — it's about identity. 'I am the type of person who trains consistently' changes behaviour at a deeper level than goal-setting. The 90-day timeframe matters: that's when behaviour becomes identity.

Groundwork tools
Habit Stack Builder90-Day Goal PlannerStrength Log
IL
Method 04
Ivy Lee Method
Ivy Lee · 1918
Six tasks
Ranked
Sequential
Complete before moving on
Pillar: Constraints

Write down your most important tasks for tomorrow, rank them, work through them in order, complete before moving on. Groundwork caps this at three — because the target audience has longer, more complex tasks. Fewer commitments, executed completely, outperforms longer lists half-done.

Groundwork tools
Daily Focus SheetWeekly Review
FF
Method 05
Full Focus System
Michael Hyatt · 2011
Annual → Quarterly → Weekly → Daily Big 3
Pillar: Cascade

Without an explicit connection between long-term goals and daily tasks, every day floats. Hyatt's cascade connects annual goals to quarterly milestones to weekly priorities to daily Big 3. Groundwork makes this modular — each level is a separate precision tool.

Groundwork tools
Annual Blueprint90-Day PlannerWeekly ReviewDaily Focus SheetIdeal Week
ST
Method 06
Stoic Philosophy
Marcus Aurelius · Ryan Holiday
Dichotomy of Control
Negative Visualisation
Memento Mori
Pillar: Constraints

Three practices structurally relevant to planning: the dichotomy of control (focus only on what you can change), negative visualisation (rehearsing what could go wrong builds resilience), and memento mori (awareness of mortality as the most powerful long-term prioritisation tool).

Groundwork tools
Stoic JournalDaily Focus SheetTransition Planner
EM
Method 07
Eisenhower Matrix
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Urgent vs Important
Do
Decide
Delegate
Delete
Pillar: Constraints

What is important is seldom urgent, and what is urgent is seldom important. The 'must not do' field on the Daily Focus Sheet is the Eisenhower Matrix distilled to its most useful output: explicitly identifying what would displace the priorities.

Groundwork tools
Daily Focus SheetIdeal Week ArchitectureWeekly Review